It’s a very inexpensive way to control virtual gear, and is compatible with Cubase, Cakewalk Sonar, Logic Audio and other major music applications. This review takes a look at the BCR2000, a USB MIDI control surface with three banks of eight rotary encoders, eight rotary switch/controllers and a complement of buttons. Behringer again has pushed the envelope, pricing the B-Control’s hundreds of dollars below their competition. Each B-Control is well spec’d out, but most impressive is the units’ pricing. Multiple units can be interconnected and share a single USB port, making them modular building blocks for the virtual studio. The units share a consistent design & size, and together make an impressive control center. The BCF features faders the BCR features rotary controls and the BCA features an audio interface. Each of the units in the B-Control series has a different primary purpose. The devices are: the BCF2000, a MIDI controller with motorized faders the BCR2000, a MIDI controller with dozens of rotary controls and the BCA2000, a multi-channel Audio/MIDI control interface. Behringer has introduced the B-Control series, a line of MIDI hardware controllers with capabilities and pricing that positions them as price/performance leaders.
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